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rust/tests/coverage
Jacob Pratt 70b69a2384 Rollup merge of #126721 - Zalathar:nested-cov-attr, r=oli-obk
coverage: Make `#[coverage(..)]` apply recursively to nested functions

This PR makes the (currently-unstable) `#[coverage(off)]` and `#[coverage(on)]` attributes apply recursively to all nested functions/closures, instead of just the function they are directly attached to.

Those attributes can now also be applied to modules and to impl/impl-trait blocks, where they have no direct effect, but will be inherited by all enclosed functions/closures/methods that don't override the inherited value.

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Fixes #126625.
2024-06-27 02:06:18 -04:00
..
2024-04-20 00:34:40 +08:00

The tests in this directory are shared by two different test modes, and can be run in multiple different ways:

  • ./x.py test coverage-map (compiles to LLVM IR and checks coverage mappings)
  • ./x.py test coverage-run (runs a test binary and checks its coverage report)
  • ./x.py test coverage (runs both coverage-map and coverage-run)

Maintenance note

These tests can be sensitive to small changes in MIR spans or MIR control flow, especially in HIR-to-MIR lowering or MIR optimizations.

If you haven't touched the coverage code directly, and the tests still pass in coverage-run mode, then it should usually be OK to just re-bless the mappings as necessary with ./x.py test coverage-map --bless, without worrying too much about the exact changes.